Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Black physician, entreprene­ur part of Helena prosperity

- — Blake Wintory

Napoleon Bonaparte Houser was a prominent Black physician, owner of the Black Diamond Drug Store, and investor in Helena from 1901 to 1920. He came to Helena from Charlotte, N.C., as the Arkansas Delta’s population and opportunit­ies grew, but returned to the place of his birth following the Elaine Massacre.

N.B. Houser was born near Gastonia, in Gaston County, N.C., on Feb. 14, 1869. He was the son of William H. Houser, a well-to-do brick mason and contractor, and Fannie Houser, a housekeepe­r and mother. The youngest of six siblings, Houser attended public schools in Charlotte and worked as a farm hand on his father’s farm until the age of 14, when he began to work at his father’s brick factory. At 16, he became his father’s personal secretary.

In 1881, Houser entered the Presbyteri­an-affiliated Biddle University in Charlotte. In 1887, after graduating from Biddle, he entered Leonard

Medical School at Shaw University in Raleigh, N.C. After finishing medical school in 1891, he received his medical license from the North Carolina Medical Board and began his medical practice in Charlotte. From 1891 until 1901, he consulted with Biddle University, supervised Samaritan Hospital for three years, and served one year as president and two years as secretary of the North Carolina Colored Medical Associatio­n — an organizati­on he helped found. Around 1890, he married his first wife, Maggie (maiden name unknown), a North Carolina native according to the 1900 Census.

Houser moved his medical practice from Charlotte to Helena in June 1901, following a visit to his brother, Charles, who was working there as a brick mason. According to a 1911 profile, Houser saw Helena’s “climate, fertile soil and teeming population of the race” as “a veritable Promised Land.” Helena, a booming Mississipp­i River town in the Arkansas Delta, was full of opportunit­ies. It was at the center of a regional economy dominated by cotton and hardwood timber; it was also the seat of Phillips County, which, in 1900, had a mostly rural agricultur­al population that was over 78% Black. Simultaneo­usly, increased racial tension in North Carolina and Charlotte likely pushed Houser to pursue new opportunit­ies outside his home state. In spring 1899, North Carolina passed a Jim Crow railroad bill that insulted the values of black middle-class citizens like Houser, who believed that hard work, education, and ultimately, success, would earn respect and insulate their class from white racism. Then in 1900, as Democrats campaigned for a disfranchi­sement amendment, white supremacy clubs sprang up throughout the state. With the amendment’s overwhelmi­ng support, especially in Houser’s home county of Mecklenbur­g, Charlotte’s luster was lost in the eyes of a young and ambitious Houser.

Houser apparently moved to Helena without his first wife and soon married another North Carolina native, Annie S. Alston, on Jan. 18, 1902, in Helena. They had one daughter, Willie Henry Houser, who was born around 1914. Houser prospered as one of the few Black doctors in Helena. In either 1904 or 1908, depending upon the source, he opened Black Diamond Drug Store in downtown Helena with $7,500 in capital. According to the 1909 Helena City Directory, the drug store operated at 301½ Cherry St., with Drs. N.B. Houser and S.H. Hargroves attending. Later, the drug store had addresses at 308½ Cherry St. (1911) and 316 York St. (1917). In 1911, Houser reported that the drug store did $2,000 in sales each month.

In 1910, Houser became president of the Helena Negro Business League. He invested considerab­ly in rental property and bought stock in the Phillips County Land Investment Co. and the Mound Bayou Oil Mill Manufactur­ing Co. Houser was also active in the social life of fraternal organizati­ons, including the Prince Hall Masons, the Knights of Pythias, and the Mosaic Templars of America.

In 1920, soon after the October 1919 Elaine Massacre, Houser left Helena and resumed his medical practice in Charlotte. Upon his death on Aug. 28, 1939, the Charlotte Observer described his medical practice as “one of the largest practices of any negro doctor in the Carolinas.” He is buried in Charlotte’s Pinewood Cemetery.

This story is adapted by Guy Lancaster from the online Encycloped­ia of Arkansas, a project of the Central Arkansas Library System. Visit the site at encycloped­iaofarkans­as.net.

 ?? (Courtesy of the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, Central Arkansas Library System) ?? Napoleon Bonaparte Houser, a prominent Black physician and businessma­n (circa early 20th century) owned the well-known Black Diamond Drug Store in Helena.
(Courtesy of the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, Central Arkansas Library System) Napoleon Bonaparte Houser, a prominent Black physician and businessma­n (circa early 20th century) owned the well-known Black Diamond Drug Store in Helena.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States